Despite some surprising inclusions, this year鈥檚 Stirling Prize has nominees to match the best from any previous year, writes Ben Flatman

After a livelier than usual 2021, this year sees a return to a more conventional Stirling shortlist. There is nothing here to match the playfulness of Wilkinson Eyre鈥檚 Cambridge mosque, or the structural daring of the Tintagel Footbridge. But that doesn鈥檛 mean 2022鈥檚 slate is without interest. In fact, I believe the best of this year鈥檚 nominees are as good as any projects we have previously seen in the Stirling.

100 Liverpool Street_4527_Charles Hosea_PRESSIMAGE_2

Source: Charles Hosea

1 Broadgate by Hopkins Architects

1 Broadgate鈥檚 inclusion comes as something of a surprise, however. It may seem odd to look back at a 1980s real estate development with nostalgia but I see what has happened to Broadgate in recent years as a rather pointless wrecking exercise. What was a series of urbane buildings and public spaces has morphed into an incoherent architectural menagerie.

Make鈥檚 5 Broadgate epitomises the transition away from Arup Associates鈥 original vision to the current jumbled mess. Hopkins鈥 building is not that bad, and deserves a commendation for its net zero credentials, but it does feel rather bloated and incongruous in this location.

I am not a huge admirer of fully glazed facades in any context but it has always struck me as a particularly uninspired choice for the City. It seems especially a shame that Hopkins, with its rich history of masonry structures, was not able to find a more sympathetic way of engaging with the immediate surroundings.

Reiach and Hall Architects_Forth Valley College Falkirk Campus_ (1)

Source: Reiach and Hall

Falkirk Forth Valley College by Reiach and Hall Architects

According to the RIBA鈥檚 own website, Reiach and Hall鈥檚 Falkirk Forth Valley College is harking back to the 1960s. If this is the case, then it is perhaps not the best advertisement for the architecture of the period. This is decent, cost-constrained public architecture, of the sort that many parts of the UK would consider themselves lucky to get. But it is hard to see why this is Stirling material.

The lack of any Scottish entries on last year鈥檚 shortlist may partly explain why it鈥檚 here but I鈥檓 confident that Scotland has much better to offer. Why for example, was Moxon Architects鈥 own stunning office building in the Cairngorms overlooked this year and last?

Hackney New Primary _4858_Nick Kane_PRESSIMAGE_1

Source: Nick Kane

Hackney New Primary School and 333 Kingland Road

There have been several very dubious educational winners of the Stirling in recent years. Projects that seem to have been chosen mainly because they ticked some virtue-signalling box for the jury. Hackney Primary School by Henley Halebrown does not fall into that category. Like the old London Board Schools, this is a beautiful building that enriches its context and creates an enclosed and nurturing environment for its students.

The school building was partly funded by the sale of luxury apartments in the conjoined tower block, which was also designed by the same architects and are nominated as a single scheme with the school. Although on some levels you could argue that it represents everything that鈥檚 wrong with how we plan and fund school building in the UK, it鈥檚 still an exceptional piece of architecture. In some respects, the realisation of such a substantial piece of design, despite the constraints, makes this an even more remarkable project.

Orchard Gardens, Ele_4839_Timothy Soar_PRESSIMAGE_3

Source: Timothy Soar

Orchard Gardens, Elephant Park by Panter Hudspith Architects

I have written before about how I would like to see more masonry high-rise architecture in London but somehow Panter Hudspith鈥檚 Orchard Gardens at Elephant Park was not what I was envisaging. The lower-level elements are more successful, but the tower itself, with its fragmented fa莽ade treatment just feels contrived. You can see what the architects were trying to do but have to question whether it was the right approach. Maccreanor Lavington鈥檚 nearby series of building is surely a more successful example of this type of mixed typology redevelopment.

The New Library, Magdalene College_4622_Nick Kane_ORIGINAL_3

Source: Nick Kane

The New Library, Magdalene College Cambridge by Niall McLaughlin Architects

I find it faintly absurd that Niall McLaughlin has not yet won the Stirling. I don鈥檛 know whether the new library at Magdalene College Cambridge is his practice鈥檚 best building but this seems as good a time as any for him to win.

I first encountered McLaughlin at the Bartlett around 2000, where he was giving bemused undergraduates a lecture about his design for a strange, very Bartlett, inflatable houseboat with solar panels and dangly beads. Since then, he has evolved into perhaps the UK鈥檚 pre-eminent architect working in the modernist tradition. And he now produces the type of architecture that I imagine Peter Cook once saw it as his life鈥檚 mission to eradicate.

The Magdalene library building sits in a long tradition of carefully crafted Oxbridge modernism. Structural masonry, extensive use of timber, subtle plays on simple geometry, and more than a hint of Kahn. This is a building that you can already tell will stand for centuries and be loved by its inhabitants for generations.

Sands End Arts and C_4513_Rory Gardiner_PRESSIMAGE_3

Source: Rory Gardiner

Sands End Arts and Community Centre by M忙 Architects

Sands End Arts and Community Centre by M忙 Architects is another worthy winner but one which I suspect will struggle in the face of such stiff competition. It is a beautifully conceived light-touch piece of architecture. M忙 have clearly relished the opportunity to work with this small corner of a Fulham park. Their sandbox included historic structures (the restored and repurposed Clancarty Lodge), the park boundary and entrance, as well as the surrounding park landscape itself.

It is the kind of quirky leftover space that appeals to many of our most interesting architecture practices. The simple pallet of materials that includes CLT framed monopitch roofs and brick floors, is tried and tested. But it is all expertly handled here to deliver a series of quietly seductive spaces. Architecture you want to inhabit and linger in.

Ben Flatman is 黑洞社区 Design鈥檚 architectural editor